Warring colors busting at the seams, the day-burnt sun's fists sag and dip into the clouds, weary of the battle the night has won. And the night sired children, restless as the dawn, riveted the dark with metal sheets and armed it with visions of an obscured future polluted with hollow promises stirring in their minds. Hope lay dying, dank with mold and blood, her cries met with clogged ears and barred doors. They were against mother, she who fills their bellies with rice and corn, she, who pours water onto their glass to the brim, she who softens their fall with carpets of moss for their bed and canopies for shadeβbetrayed and thrown out with the wolves. Now these, and what sorrow to behold hands holding up their voice snatched and pocketed for a bushel of grain to fend off pangs of hunger away for days, in return, all their tomorrows until none to spare. Mother why have they forsaken you? You gave them life, now they bring you death.